adding insult to injury

The debt ceiling debacle last summer “injured” the US government and our citizenry in that it became apparent to the world that we’ve become an ungovernable nation. The effects of this revelation will be felt for a lifetime or more – history has shown us what happens when the people have decided en masse that a particular empire was in decline, the results have not been pretty.

This week, Congress has decided to add insult to that injury – a public bitchfight over whether or not people making either $500,000 or $600,000 should be the cut-off point for the expiration of a set of decade-old phony tax cuts that were never officially approved anyway. Discussions about taking a nibble off this or that social program, military budget boondoggle or what have you are a distraction and do not warrant the breathless “breaking news” tweet-tornadoes and on-air exaltation they’ve been getting.

This evening on every news channel and radio station in the country, you’ll be treated to the opinions of the following guests:

Rent-a-Pundits

Day traders

“News personalities”

Make-believe hedge fund managers

Chief Strategists of firms that only exist on LLC paperwork

Lobbyists who are part of the problem to begin with

People who had some free time and a clean suit

People whose publicity agents and PR firms are on their game

Former politicians who have no special insight into the current negotiations

Partisan hacks who regurgitate party talking points for a living

There will be some voices of reason and clarity – more than likely these will be the reporters and bloggers who actually cover this stuff objectively for a living – but these will be few and far between.

Warren Buffett gave an interview to the BBC on Friday. When asked about the Fiscal Cliff deadline, he told the audience it was a non-event either way. Mr. Buffett has as much at stake – in both invested capital as well as the livelihoods of his employees and their dependents – as anyone else in the nation. If he tells you it won’t matter, that ought to be good enough. There is no reason you should be actively seeking out the “insights” of others.

Remember:

* No one knows what will happen, including those in the center of it.

* No one knows what the market or economic reaction will be either, although some guesses will prove to have been better than others

* When all is said and done, off the cliff or on it, you will still get out of bed next year, make the kids breakfast and put them on the school bus. Having some kind of advanced edge on the Fiscal Cliff’s outcome will not change that.

Sleep tight, and may the insulting proceedings in Washington carry on without your rapt attention.

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